This has been a rather long thread, so I apologize for missing the
beginning. But what level of conformance is this aspect being considered?
I can see - on the development side - that this will be one that will be
impractical in many cases. If an application is designed to dynamically
generate a table of data, retrofitting that application to create a graphic
on-the-fly would be so costly as to be prohibitive.
Chris O'Kennon
Commonwealth of Virginia Webmaster/
VIPNet Portal Architect
www.myvirginia.org
______________________________________
"When people are free to do as they please,
they usually imitate each other."
-----Original Message-----
From: Charles McCathieNevile [mailto:charles@w3.org]
Sent: Tuesday, July 23, 2002 8:44 AM
To: WAI GL
Subject: illustrating content - tables of figures
One area where it is helpful to illustrate, and where it is technically
trivially easy in many cases is tables of numeric data. Programs to
transform these into graphic representations have been available as
mass-market software at least since 1990.
I would suggest that one criteria is that all tables of numeric data are
accompanied by a graphic representation.
At the level of techniques, there is information I have read when I studied
this stuff explaining different kinds of graphing techniques, and some
results of testing the different ones for usability. If anyone has current
knowledge and experience some references would be helpful.
Charles McCN
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